student opinion
How Have You Collaborated From a Distance During the Pandemic?
Have you found new ways to work with others over the internet? What have you accomplished? What do you miss, if anything, about working together in person?
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Have you found new ways to work with others over the internet? What have you accomplished? What do you miss, if anything, about working together in person?
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In this lesson, students will learn about the state of the presidential race the morning after Election Day, and consider what the results might mean for a deeply divided nation.
By Katherine Schulten and
As the votes are counted, we invite teenagers to post reactions and have conversations here. What does this election mean for our nation?
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In this lesson, students will learn about recent protests in Poland and then reflect on their own beliefs about abortion rights.
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In this lesson, students will learn about the Electoral College — how it works in a presidential election and why it was created — and consider whether it needs to be reformed.
By Jeremy Engle and
What unique challenges do young people face? What do you wish parents (and other adults) understood about what you’re going through now?
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We invite middle and high school students ages 11-19 to tell a short story about a meaningful life experience in 600 words or fewer. Contest Dates: Oct. 13-Nov. 17, 2020
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An invitation to show us — in words or images, video or audio — how the events of this extraordinary year have affected you.
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Who do you think will make a better president? What is at stake for you and for the nation?
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Is it OK not to vote, or is voting a civic duty?
By Shannon Doyne and
A simple game you can play from now through Election Day to help start conversations and navigate an avalanche of information.
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This week a divided Senate Judiciary Committee kicked off four days of confirmation hearings for Judge Amy Coney Barrett, President Trump’s nominee for the Supreme Court. Have you been following the hearings? How much do you think the Supreme Court matters?
By Nicole Daniels, Shannon Doyne and
Is the way Americans choose the president undemocratic and unfair? Or does the Electoral College work the way it’s supposed to, even if the candidate who wins the most votes loses?
By Michael Gonchar and
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In this lesson, students will use more than 200 photographs to learn about the protests that swept across the United States in late May and June.
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This companion guide invites families, students and educators to have a conversation about the goals of public education in America … and the relationship between race, social class and a quality education.
By Nicole Daniels and
To help teachers make the most of these films, we also provide a grab-bag of teaching ideas, related readings and student activities.
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Putting the demonstrations into a larger context, with help from The Times and other news and educational organizations.
By Natalie Proulx and
Did you ever feel that someone or some group on the internet was trying to persuade you to believe a certain way?
By Shannon Doyne and
What lessons about family have you learned during the pandemic?
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Stress, anxiety, burnout … how are you coping these days?
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In this lesson, students will examine the math behind Covid-19 risk in schools and uncover misleading percentages and data reliability in coronavirus case reporting.
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How has consumer spending in the United States changed during the pandemic?
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In this lesson, students learn about the growing child labor crisis around the world and consider ways they can inform others.
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Back by popular demand, The Learning Network will host a webinar on November 5 on how to teach and learn with the award-winning graphics from The New York Times.
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Twenty-eight middle and high school teachers from The New York Times Teaching Project tell us how they’re navigating remote instruction this fall.
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Activities and lessons that can be employed by English, social studies, math and science educators, using Times photos, illustrations, graphs, videos, podcasts and articles.
By Michael Gonchar and
Ideas for creating authentic connections, meaningful relationships and classroom camaraderie through the screen.
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In this webinar, The Learning Network shares ideas and resources to help your students tell their own stories, and prepare for our personal narrative contest.
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A flexible, seven-unit program based on the real-world writing found in newspapers, from editorials and reviews to personal narratives and informational essays.
This special unit acknowledges both the tumultuous events of 2020 and their outsize impact on young people — and invites teenagers to respond creatively.
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This teaching guide, the second in our seven-unit writing curriculum, includes daily writing prompts, lessons based on selected mentor texts, and the announcement of a new personal narrative essay contest.
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An invitation for students to write about food and fashion, movies and music, books and buildings for a global audience. Featuring writing prompts, mentor-text lesson plans and a culminating contest.
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We invite both STEM and humanities teachers to consider ways to inject more life into what is perhaps the least-loved genre of academic writing.
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